Sunday, December 26, 2010

Most Turkish home cooking is deceptively simple. The ingredients are common and cheap but the skilled hands of our mothers and grandmothers elevate them in such a way that the end product is greater than the sum of its parts. Within the vast and varied breadth of Turkish cooking, one of the most cherished dishes is börek. At its core a basic dough of flour and water encasing a savory filling made from the humble potato, spinach or ground beef, börek is fried or baked so that the edges of the dough crisp up and the filling becomes meltingly tender. My favorite part, though, is the sprinkle of nigella seeds on top. You can omit them if you'd like, but to me, their haunting flavor and slight crunch is as essential as the filling and the dough. Nigella seeds can be found at spice stores, Middle Eastern markets and even at some Whole Foods.

Making a good börek requires skill and is thought to be one of the hallmarks of a good cook. If assembled as individual rolls, it also takes time and effort. It is therefore said that if somebody has made you börek, they must care for you a great deal! I learned to make this dish from my aunt, a lady so kind, loving and generous that I'm sure she would make börek for me every day if I asked. I've modified the assembly method so that the dish bakes as a single pie rather than individual rolls. This cuts the prep time down to under an hour.

The key to a proper Turkish börek is to have the appropriate dough. We use a thin, supple dough called yufka. In Turkey, most people buy it in supermarkets, or freshly-made from a tiny neighborhood yufka shop, where it will invariably be sold by a cheerful boy of sixteen with a light dusting of flour over his impeccably white outfit. Outside of Turkey, one can find yufka in middle Eastern stores. It is sometimes sold under its North African names: warka or feuilles de brik. You can make it yourself if you are skilled with a rolling pin, but the store-bought kind works fine when moistened with a little milk and oil. Phyllo is too dry and brittle to make a good substitute. If your yufka is in large sheets, you will need to cut it into triangles which are about eight inches (20 cm) tall.

Börek is great when hot but also good at room temperature and therefore makes a great party and potluck dish. Another advantage to it is that it can be made up to a day ahead of time. Assemble it, then refrigerate, tightly covered with plastic wrap. Bake right before serving.

Börek

Börek can have many different fillings. One of my favorite variations keeps the potatoes but replaces the feta cheese with some sauteed onions and ground beef. You can also do an all-potato version spiced up with a combination of any of the following Indian spices sauteed in a spoonful of oil for a few minutes: Whole cumin, mustard seeds, caraway, fennel seeds, nigella, chopped curry leaves. Serves 6-8.

8-10 triangles of yufka

4 medium potatoes, peeled and quartered

2-3 oz (50 g) full-fat feta cheese, roughly crumbled

Pinch of cayenne (optional)

1 egg

4 tbsp milk

6 tbsp vegetable oil

1 egg yolk

Nigella seeds, for decoration (optional)

1. Boil the potatoes in heavily salted water until very tender, 15-20 minutes. Drain.

2. Return the pot to the stove over medium-low heat. Mash the potatoes in the pot, then mix in the feta and cayenne. Season aggressively with black pepper. Taste and add more salt if needed - you want the filling to be pretty salty. Take off the heat and set aside.

3. Preheat the oven to 375F (180C). Butter a round pie plate or 10 inch ovenproof skillet. Beat the egg in a bowl, then whisk in the oil and milk.

4. Arrange the yufka triangles in the skillet or pie plate as shown in the picture: Put one triangle so that its flat end sits in the middle and the pointed end hangs off the edge. You want at least three inches of overhang as this portion will be folded back over to cover the filling. Repeat with the remaining triangles, overlapping them slightly. Brush the bottom and the sides generously with the milk mixture.

5. Distribute the potatoes evenly over the dough and drizzle on a little of the milk mixture.

6. Starting with the triangle that was put in last, brush the end of each yufka triangle with the milk mixture (this makes it more supple and easier to work with) and fold it over the filling, pressing so that it lies flat. If any part of the yufka seems close to breaking or doesn't want to lie flat, you can brush with more milk and pinch the stubborn bits together. In the end the filling should be completely covered.

7. Beat the egg yolk in a small bowl and dribble in just a few drops of water. Brush it all over the top of the börek and sprinkle on the nigella seeds.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Scrambled eggs are just as ubiquitious a breakfast food in Turkey as they are in the United States. We amp up the nutrition and the flavor in the dish by first softening some onion, green pepper and tomato in butter or oil. This vegetable combo forms the backbone of many Turkish dishes and adds a great savory depth to the eggs. Served with some crusty bread to sop it up, menemen is the perfect choice for a rainy Sunday brunch. If you're in search of comfort food, you can have your chicken soup for the soul - I'll take menemen!

The keys to the success of this dish are to use the thin-fleshed, mild green peppers called Cubanelles rather than bell peppers, and to cook the eggs over low heat so that they are only just set and still moist when served.

Menemen

I like my menemen to be liquid enough that I can sop it up with some bread, therefore I only cook the tomatoes until they are soft but not yet dry. Non-traditional but delicious add-ins include crumbled feta, a pinch of smoked Spanish paprika or hot pepper. The turmeric in the recipe is not very traditional either, but it gives the menemen a nice, bright yellow color (it won't affect the flavor.) Serves 4.

2 tbsp butter

6 eggs, beaten

1 small onion, diced

2 tomatoes, chopped

1 Cubanelle pepper, seeded and chopped

1 clove garlic, minced

1/2 tbsp chopped fresh thyme, parsley or oregano (optional)

1 pinch turmeric (optional)

1. In a large, preferably cast iron, skillet, melt the butter over medium-low heat. Add the onions and pepper and cook until soft, 5-10 min. Add the garlic and thyme and cook one more minute.

2. Add the tomatoes and cook for a few minutes until soft but still juicy.

3. Season the eggs with salt, pepper and turmeric and add to the pan. Let cook for about ten seconds and then stir continuously to scramble. Take them off the heat soon after they have set.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

One of my favorite sayings is: "When the going gets tough, the tough get going." It's a great reminder to be strong in life, to stop complaining, to keep my head high. However, even the tough find themselves in need of a little help sometimes. I recently failed at something I had set my mind on doing and had a pretty lousy evening as a result - the kind of evening where you feel lost, lonely and powerless, where the phone doesn't ring no matter how much you want it to and the air in the house hangs heavy with silence. If I'd had any sort of musical talent, like this lady here, or this one, I'm sure I could have turned my angst into some killer song lyrics that night. Failing that, I sat around and moped until it occurred to me that I hadn't cooked anything in a long while.

It isn't easy to pinpoint why cooking is, in many ways, my ultimate escape. Sure, there's the thrill of biting into something I've made for the first time and having it taste great, of being in control and knowing how things will turn out. More than those, however, I love the sensory experience of cooking. Just like listening to the high whine of a Supertramp harmonica with my eyes closed, or receiving a big hug from a loved one, something about the sizzle of onions hitting hot oil, the sour lash of lime on my tongue and the powerful aroma of herbs calms me down, fills my chest to bursting with a slow, deep exuberance. By concentrating on cooking, I can forget my silly first world problems, at least for a little while, and leave my house with a smile the next day. In any event, it's hard to be down when the smell of cookies is wafting through your kitchen.

This recipe is from one of my favorite food blogs, Homesick Texan. This blogger's recipes are foolproof and inventive and I love the way she writes with so much passion about the cuisine of her home state. These cookies ingeniously pair the Mexican ingredients of lime and pumpkin seeds (pepitas) and are deliciously light, crumbly and nutty. The tang of the lime juice in the cookies is unexpected but addictive. I can also imagine substituting the pumpkin seeds and lime with other nut-citrus combinations. Hazelnuts and orange or almonds and lemon would be great pairings.

Pumpkin Seed-Lime Cookies

Adapted from here. My only change to the recipe was to add a bit of roasted coriander seed, which gives the cookies a subtly warm, toasty aftertaste. You can skip the coriander if you'd like. Don't overcream the butter and sugar or your cookies will spread in the oven. I halved the original recipe. This amount makes 15-16 cookies.

3/4 cup (100 g) hulled pumpkin seeds

3/4 tsp coriander seeds (optional)

8 tbsp (1 stick/110 g) room temperature butter, cut into small cubes

1/4 cup (60 g) sugar

1 cup (125 g) flour

1/4 tsp salt

Zest of one lime

Juice from half a lime

1/4 cup powdered sugar

1. If using the coriander, toast it in a dry pan over medium heat for a few minutes, until fragrant. Let cool, then grind.

2. Toast the pumpkin seeds in a dry pan, stirring occasionally, until golden. (Skip this step if your pumpkin seeds are already roasted.) Let cool, then pulse to a coarse powder in the food processor. Don't grind continuously or you will end up with a paste rather than a powder.

3. Put the butter in a medium bowl. Using a fork, incorporate the sugar into the butter.

4. Work the ground pumpkin seeds, flour, salt, coriander and about three quarters of the lime zest into the butter-sugar mixture until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs. Add the lime juice and mix until dough comes together. Cover and chill 30-60 minutes.

5. Roll tablespoon-sized lumps of dough into balls, then roll the balls into 3-inch logs and curl the ends to form crescents. Don't make the crescents too flat. Line cookies on a baking sheet, leaving at least half an inch of space between them, and bake in a preheated 350F (175C) oven for 15 minutes, until slightly golden on top. Let cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes.

6. Grind the remaining lime zest with the powdered sugar in a food processor. While the cookies are still slightly warm, dip them on both sides into this sugar mixture.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Few things in life are more irresistible than warm bread fresh out of the oven. Unfortunately, due to the time required by yeasted doughs to rise, this is not a pleasure that can be experienced whenever the impulse strikes. Given this state of affairs (and my penchant for all things corn) I turned to cornbread. It doesn't require any yeast, rising or kneading and can be in your stomach within 30 minutes from the time it occurs to you to make some.

Unlike traditional cornbreads, this recipe uses two types of ground corn: Masa harina and yellow corn meal. "Maseca" is a common masa harina (corn flour) brand available in supermarkets. The masa is first roasted which gives it an incredible aroma - the smell of the batter as you mix it up will drive you insane. The bread bakes up nice and moist and is delicious eaten warm with this truffled herb butter. Try not to finish it all at once.

Cornbread

Adapted from here. The bread can be baked in a cast-iron skillet or a baking dish. If using the skillet, preheat it in the oven while you mix up the batter. I halved the sugar as I thought the original recipe made a bread that was too sweet. It also calls for buttermilk which I rarely keep on hand. A good substitute for the amount required here is 2 tbsp vinegar mixed into 1 2/3 cup milk and rested for 10 minutes until the milk is slightly curdled.

1 cup masa

1/2 cup vegetable or canola oil

1 2/3 cup milk

2 tbsp vinegar (not balsamic)

2 eggs

1 1/3 cup yellow corn meal

1/3 cup flour

3 tbsp sugar

4 tsp baking powder

1 1/4 tsp salt

1. Preheat oven to 400F. Mix the vinegar and milk and let stand for a few minutes until the milk curdles a bit. In the meantime, spread the masa on a baking sheet and bake until slightly browned, about 8 minutes. Transfer to a bowl and let cool. If using a cast-iron skillet, put it in the oven to heat up.

2. Mix the dry ingredients into the masa. In a seperate bowl, whisk together the oil, the milk & vinegar mixture and the eggs, then stir the wet ingredients into the dry ones until a batter forms.

3. Brush the skillet or a glass baking dish with 2 tsp oil. Pour in the batter. Bake for 15 minutes, or until the top is golden and a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean. Let cool for 10 minutes.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

A famous scientist once said that if you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe. I don't know if I can claim credit for your existence, dear reader, but I can definitely make an apple pie from scratch. It's easy! For the longest time, I used store-bought crusts when making pie, because every pie crust recipe which I read came with a million scary admonishments: The butter had to be cold cold cold, it had to be incorporated into the flour just so, and if God forbid you overworked your dough, some unspecified but obviously grave catastrophe would befall your dessert. Moreover, I did not enjoy cleaning flour and pastry bits from my counter after rolling out the crust. Then, one day, I stumbled upon this recipe from the blog Homesick Texan and almost had a heart attack after seeing that the crust was made with not butter, but oil, with no care for temperature or any of that overworking business. It calls for the dough to be rolled out between two sheets of wax paper, which not only reduces clean-up but also makes the transfer of the dough from the counter to the pie plate much easier.

My only modification to the recipe was to replace the oil with melted butter, because I felt the oil version was a bit bland. In order to amp up the flavor, I brown the butter, but this is optional. My sweetener of choice in this pie is maple syrup. It has a distinctive taste which complements apples well and is more nuanced than plain sugar.

Maple Apple Pie

When measuring flour, lightly spoon it into the measuring cup. If you pack it in tightly, you will end up with a lot more than is called for. Brown butter is butter which has been cooked until its milk solids have taken on a golden brown color and a delicious nutty aroma. To get an idea of the color, you can look at this image. The brown butter is optional. You could proceed with plain melted butter. If you don't have a rolling pin, you can use an empty wine bottle like I do. The key to rolling out the crust evenly is to press it into a round disc with your hands, then start in the center with the pin and roll out in one direction, lift the pin and place it back in the center, roll out in the opposite direction, lift again, place in center and roll out in a direction perpendicular to the first, and so on. Serve warm with vanilla ice cream.

Crust ingredients:

1 cup (125 g) flour

1/2 tsp salt

4 tbsp (60 g) butter

2 tbsp (30 ml) milk

Filling ingredients:

4-5 apples (Golden Delicious and Macintosh are good choices, as is Granny Smith)

Juice of 1/2 lemon

3 tbsp flour

3 tbsp sugar

1/2 tsp cinnamon

6 tbsp maple syrup

2 tbsp butter, cut into small pieces

1. (Optional step) Put 4 tbsp butter in a small, light-colored pan and cook on medium heat. Keep dragging a spoon through the foam at the top so that you can see the bottom. After 5-6 minutes you will see little brown flecks. As soon as these have reached a rich brown color, pour the butter into a bowl to stop it from cooking further.

2. Mix the liquid crust ingredients in one bowl and the dry ones in another bowl. Add the liquids to the dry ingredients and stir to incorporate.

3. Lay a large piece of wax paper on your counter. Dump the dough on this, shape the dough into a ball with your hands, then flatten. Lay another piece of wax paper over the top and roll dough out evenly into a circle.

4. Peel off the top paper. Slide your hands under the bottom piece of paper, lift the crust and flip it over into a 9-inch pie plate, then peel off the paper. Press the crust into the plate. Cut off any overhang with a sharp knife.

5. Peel and core the apples. Cut them into quarters, then cut each quarter lengthwise into 3-4 wedges. Immediately toss the apples with the lemon juice to prevent browning.

6. Mix the flour, sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl, then mix this well into the apples.

7. Preheat oven to 375F. Put one layer of apples in concentric circles (or other decorative pattern) in the crust. Drizzle on the maple syrup. Arrange a second layer of apples on top of the first and dot this top layer with the butter.

8. Bake for 50-60 minutes, until apples are tender and the crust is golden.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Vegetables. They are the unloved children of the food world. Few of us would gravitate towards brussels sprouts or okra if given a choice. Nevertheless, their myriad health benefits are well-known and we can all stand to get a bit more of them into our diet. For me, the trouble with vegetables is twofold. First of all, I don't always have the energy, after I get home from work, to wash, peel and chop. Second, I don't like vegetables cooked to the point of mushiness. This recipe, from a great food blog called Just Hungry, takes care of both problems. It is make-ahead, lasts four to five days in the fridge, makes an excellent side dish for everything from fried fish to the most luxurious gratin, and keeps the vegetables wonderfully crisp.

These aren't true pickles but rather vegetables marinated overnight in a flavorful mix of lemon juice, honey, mustard and spices. The honey won't make the marinade sweet, its purpose is to cut the bite of the lemon juice. You can use pretty much any combination of vegetables that you like. As mentioned in the original recipe, cook tougher vegetables like carrots, cauliflower and broccoli in boiling water before marinating them. I boil them for no more than 30 seconds in order to preserve their crispness.

I used purple cauliflower, which is the culprit behind the fabulous lurid purple color in the photo!

Lemon-Mustard Marinated Vegetables

This recipe is very open to adaptation. You can vary not only the vegetables but also the spices: A pinch of cayenne, some garlic, a little ginger or a couple of cloves might add interesting dimensions. If you don't have a mortar and pestle, the spices can be crushed with the bottom of a heavy pan. You can substitute the whole spices with a pinch of ground, but I quite like the heady crunch of a bit of allspice or pepper against the vegetables.

1 small head cauliflower, chopped into small florets

1 bell pepper, seeded and cut into 1/4 inch wide strips

2 small carrots, peeled and cut into 1/4 inch wide strips

1/2 cup (120 ml) fresh-squeezed lemon juice, from about 3 lemons

2 tbsp honey

1 tsp Dijon mustard

1/2 tsp whole-grain mustard

1/4 tsp whole allspice, coarsely cracked in a mortar and pestle

1/4 tsp black peppercorns, coarsely cracked in a mortar and pestle

1/4 tsp salt

1. Mix the lemon juice, mustards, allspice and peppercorns in a tupperware big enough to contain all the vegetables.

2. Put the honey and salt in a small bowl and microwave for 20 seconds to melt the honey. Mix this into the lemon juice.

3. Bring a pot of water to a rolling boil. Add the cauliflower and carrot and boil 30 seconds, then drain. Immediately add to the tupperware with the lemon juice, add the pepper, then mix well.

4. Let cool, uncovered and stirring occasionally, then cover tightly with the lid and refrigerate overnight.

Friday, November 12, 2010

If there's one American holiday which I've adopted with enthusiasm, it's Thanksgiving. It's free of gift-giving obligations, it has no religious aspect and therefore includes everyone, and best of all, it's a celebration of the most important things in life: Friends, family, and gluttonous eating. I can definitely get behind that!

A quick Googling for Thanksgiving recipes can easily overwhelm. The turkey alone presents a multitude of options, each of them with its own set of challenges: It could be brined (who wants to lug around a sloshing bag of salted water filled with a 20 lb. bird?), roasted (this takes at least three hours!), smoked (call the fire department), stuffed (or not), or deep-fried (you must be insane). The myriad components have to be timed down to the minute and most of them prepare right before serving. To an amateur, lazy cook like me, those are pretty discouraging challenges. When I have guests, I like to prepare the lion's share of the food in advance so that I am not slaving away in the kitchen while everyone's yukking it up over wine.

This year, through a little trial and error, I put together a Thanksgiving menu that is very easy. 80% of the work is done the day before. It takes roughly three hours, less if you have any helpers. The menu is somewhat minimalist since it includes only one appetizer, one vegetable side dish and one dessert, but everything is made from scratch and you can always ask the other guests to contribute additional dishes! Without further ado, the menu:

Blanched green beans make a speedy make-ahead side for Thanksgiving, especially if you can get a helper to top and tail the beans for you! The vinegar cuts nicely through the richness of the rest of the meal.

Click here for the Thanksgiving intro post and the rest of the recipes.

Green Beans with Toasted Almonds

Don't boil the beans for too long or they'll turn grey and mushy. Plunging them immediately into ice water keeps them crisp and bright green. You can use hazelnuts or pecans and add dried cranberries, cherries, orange zest or lemon zest to the vinaigrette. The beans can be blanched and chilled, the nuts toasted and the vinaigrette prepared the day before but don't toss everything together until just before serving.

1.5 lb. green beans, top-and-tailed and snapped in half

A handful of slivered almonds

2 tbsp olive oil

1.5 tbsp red or white wine vinegar

1 tbsp maple syrup (optional)

1. Bring a pot of salted water to boil. While it's coming to boil, put cold water and a bunch of ice cubes into a large bowl.

2. Throw the beans into the boiling water and cook 6-7 minutes. They should still be bright green. Immediately drain the beans and put them into the ice water to stop them cooking. Let stand for a few minutes until beans are completely cool, then drain.

3. In a small pan over medium-low heat, toast the almonds, stirring frequently, until slightly browned, 4-5 minutes.

4. Shake the oil, vinegar and syrup together in a small jar, then toss all the ingredients together.

Does anybody not like mashed potatoes? They are the universal comfort food. I normally make them with milk but for Thanksgiving, it's nice to make them good and creamy with some butter and sour cream. Don't worry, the sour cream doesn't make the potatoes taste sour.

Creamy Mashed Potatoes

Adapted from here. You can add various spices such as cayenne or smoked paprika, stir in some chopped chives or fried, crumbled sage leaves, or replace a part of the sour cream with goat cheese or ricotta. I like to keep it simple to complement the other flavors at the meal. Leaving the peel on a few of the potatoes adds a nice color. If making ahead, just cover the finished dish tightly with foil and refrigerate overnight. On the day, take it out of the fridge when the turkey goes in the oven so that it has time to come to room temperature, then throw it in the oven, still covered with the foil, along with the stuffing (don't forget to lower the temperature to 375F) when the turkey comes out. Serves 8-9.

3.5 lb red potatoes, most of them peeled, all of them quartered

3 tbsp butter

3 tbsp sour cream

3 cloves garlic, peeled (optional)

1. Bring a big pot of heavily salted water to boil over high heat and throw in the quartered potatoes and the garlic. Let boil until a fork slides as easily out of a potato as it slid in.

2. Lower the heat to low. Drain the potatoes and put them back in the pot. With a potato masher, mash them until no big lumps remain, but do not mash further. Add the butter and cream and mash for a few more seconds until everything is blended. Taste, add salt if needed. Add more butter or cream if the potatoes are not creamy enough to your taste.

3. Put into a baking dish. If making ahead, reheat, covered, in a 375F oven for 30 min.

Click here for the Thanksgiving intro post and the rest of the recipes.

It seems incredible, but this turkey cooks in only 70 minutes in a hot oven, thanks to the butterflying technique I learned from my old friend Jacques. The bird looks very funny splayed out on the tray. When I served it, accusations of looking sexual were lobbed against the poor thing by some dirty-minded guests, but I defended my masterpiece!

Gravy and stuffing are traditionally made at the last minute. Here, a rich turkey stock is made using the bag of organs that comes inside the turkey and the backbone and wing tips obtained from the butterflying. This stock, when thickened with some cooked flour, turns into a very nice gravy. For a gluten-free gravy, melt a couple of tablespoons of butter, add 3 cups of turkey stock, bring to boil, then stir in 1 tbsp of cornstarch dissolved in 1 tbsp water. Cook until it is sufficiently thickened. The turkey stock also acts as the liquid in the stuffing.

In terms of timing: Butterfly the turkey the night before. Salt and powder it and put it back in the fridge. Use the backbone and wings to make the stock. (While the stock is cooking, you can make the mashed potatoes, the green beans, the prep for the stuffing and the cranberry sauce.) After the stock is ready, make the gravy as the last step. On the actual day, when the turkey is cooked, there will be a lot of juices left in the roasting pan. Drizzle a few tablespoons of these into both the gravy and the stuffing to enrich them further. Keep in mind that the turkey must rest for 30 minutes after cooking.

Turkey Stock

Use all the organs except the liver, which is the flatter, redder one. Start with cold water, don't let the stock boil too hard, and use a pot that's taller than it is wide. After eating the turkey, you can repeat this recipe with the remaining carcass to make a second stock (no need for the initial browning step for this one) which can be used to make turkey soup or in any recipe that calls for chicken broth. The stock will keep in the fridge for 4-5 days and can also be frozen.

Turkey neck, heart and gizzards

Turkey backbone and wing tips

Splash of dry white wine (optional)

1 stalk celery, broken in two (optional)

1 carrot, washed but unpeeled (optional)

1 onion, washed but unpeeled, halved

2 garlic cloves, smashed but unpeeled

1 bay leaf

1 clove

3-4 sprigs fresh thyme

1-2 sprigs fresh rosemary

A few peppercorns, coarsely cracked

A few whole allspice berries, coarsely cracked (optional)

1. Heat a tbsp of oil or butter in a stockpot over medium-high heat. Add the turkey parts and cook 6-7 minutes until very well browned on one side, then brown the other side as well.

2. Lower-heat to medium-low. Add a large splash of white wine and scrape off any browned bits stuck to the bottom of the pot. Let the wine cook off for a minute, then add the rest of the ingredients and 8 cups of cold water. Bring to a slow simmer and cook for 1.5 - 2 hours. Lower heat if it starts to boil vigorously at any point.

3. Strain the stock into another pot or a big bowl. Let cool for 15 minutes then skim off and discard the thin layer of fat that will have accumulated at the top.

70 Minute Butterflied Roast Turkey

Make sure your turkey isn't any bigger than 12 lb or it won't cook in time. Salting and putting baking powder on the skin and letting it chill overnight makes for moist meat and a very crisp-skinned turkey, but you can skip this step if you don't have time. The turkey might look a little blotchy and red after the overnight salting. That's OK. Serves 8-9 people.

1 turkey, around 11-12 lb.

1 tsp baking powder

1. Put the turkey breast-side down on a cutting board. Using kitchen shears, cut down first one side of the backbone and then the other. Chop off the wing tips. Reserve wing tips and backbone for stock. Open turkey like a book. Flip turkey over and press down as hard as you can on the breastbone to flatten the bird. Put it cut side down on a rack set in a roasting pan and sprinkle the baking powder and 1 tbsp salt over the skin. Refrigerate overnight, or at least 6 hours, uncovered.

2. Take turkey out of the fridge about an hour before cooking and let it come to room temperature. Preheat oven to 450F.

3. Roast turkey for 70 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through, until the juice runs clear when turkey is pierced with a knife. Let rest for 30 minutes before carving.

Stuffing

This is a basic stuffing recipe. It's delicious as is but you can jazz it up with other ingredients like nuts, dried fruit, chestnuts or sauteed mushrooms. If you don't have stale bread, spread the cubed fresh bread on a baking sheet and toast in a 400F oven for 10 minutes, until a bit dried out. To save time on the day itself, the recipe can be prepared through step 3 and chilled overnight. On the day, take the stuffing out of the fridge when the turkey goes in the oven so that it has time to come to room temperature, then throw it in the oven (don't forget to lower the temperature to 375F) when the turkey comes out.

1 loaf day-old French bread, cut into 1-inch cubes

1 onion, diced

1 stalk celery, halved lengthwise then diced

2-3 cloves garlic, minced

3-4 sprigs fresh thyme, minced

1-2 sprigs fresh rosemary, minced

About 10 fresh sage leaves, minced

1 egg yolk

1-2 cups turkey or low-sodium chicken stock, depending on how moist and pasty you like your stuffing

1. Heat 1 tbsp olive oil or butter over medium-low heat in a skillet. Add onions and celery and cook, stirring occasionally, for about 7 minutes or until onions are wilted and translucent. Add garlic and herbs and cook 1 more minute. Toss the bread with this mixture.

2. Beat the egg in a bowl, then beat in the stock.

3. Toss the bread with the stock mixture. Taste, salt if needed. Add more stock if stuffing seems dry. Cover with foil.

4. Bake at 375 for 20-25 minutes. Take off the foil and bake another 5 minutes.

Gravy

The gravy is simply thickened turkey stock. You can add finely chopped sauteed mushrooms or a tablespoon of chopped parsley for color. Make the gravy the day ahead and simply reheat on the day on the stovetop. If it seems too thick while reheating, add a few tablespoons of the pan drippings from the roasting pan or more turkey stock.

1 tbsp butter

1/2 tbsp oil

2 tbsp flour

2-3 cups turkey stock

1. Heat the stock for a few minutes in the microwave. Meanwhile, in a saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the oil and flour and cook, stirring, until flour is slightly browned. This mixture shouldn't look pasty, almost crumbly. If it looks too wet, add a bit more flour.

2. Add the heated stock and bring to a boil, whisking to dissolve the flour lumps. Boil for a few minutes until the sauce has thickened to the consistency you like. Taste, add salt if needed.

3. Reheat over medium-low heat right before serving.

Quick'n'Easy Jellied Cranberry Sauce

The pectin in the apple makes this sauce gel nicely.This recipe makes a sauce that is slightly sweet. Decrease the sugar by a couple of tablespoons if you like it more sour.

1 bag (12 oz) fresh cranberries

1 apple, peeled, cored and grated

1 cup sugar

3/4 cup water

1. Put everything in a pot over medium-high heat. Bring to a boil and cook 15-18 minutes, until the cranberries have mostly broken down.